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Age- and sex-specific effects of a long-term lifestyle intervention on body weight and cardiometabolic health markers in adults with prediabetes: results from the diabetes prevention study PREVIEW

Zhu, Ruixin; Craciun, Ionut; Bernhards-Werge, Jan; Jalo, Elli; Poppitt, Sally D.; Silvestre, Marta P.; Huttunen-Lenz, Maija; McNarry, Melitta A.; Stratton, Gareth; Handjiev, Svetoslav; Handjieva-Darlenska, Teodora; Navas-Carretero, Santiago; Sundvall, Jouko; Adam, Tanja C.; Drummen, Mathijs; Simpson, Elizabeth J.; Macdonald, Ian A.; Brand-Miller, Jennie; Muirhead, Roslyn; Lam, Tony; Vestentoft, Pia S.; Færch, Kristine; Martinez, J. Alfredo; Fogelholm, Mikael; Raben, Anne

Age- and sex-specific effects of a long-term lifestyle intervention on body weight and cardiometabolic health markers in adults with prediabetes: results from the diabetes prevention study PREVIEW Thumbnail


Authors

Ruixin Zhu

Ionut Craciun

Jan Bernhards-Werge

Elli Jalo

Sally D. Poppitt

Marta P. Silvestre

Maija Huttunen-Lenz

Melitta A. McNarry

Gareth Stratton

Svetoslav Handjiev

Teodora Handjieva-Darlenska

Santiago Navas-Carretero

Jouko Sundvall

Tanja C. Adam

Mathijs Drummen

Elizabeth J. Simpson

Ian A. Macdonald

Jennie Brand-Miller

Roslyn Muirhead

Tony Lam

Pia S. Vestentoft

Kristine Færch

J. Alfredo Martinez

Mikael Fogelholm

Anne Raben



Abstract

Aims/hypothesis

Lifestyle interventions are the first-line treatment option for body weight and cardiometabolic health management. However, whether age groups or women and men respond differently to lifestyle interventions is under debate. We aimed to examine age- and sex-specific effects of a low-energy diet (LED) followed by a long-term lifestyle intervention on body weight, body composition and cardiometabolic health markers in adults with prediabetes (i.e. impaired fasting glucose and/or impaired glucose tolerance).

Methods

This observational study used longitudinal data from 2223 overweight participants with prediabetes in the multicentre diabetes prevention study PREVIEW. The participants underwent a LED-induced rapid weight loss (WL) period followed by a 3 year lifestyle-based weight maintenance (WM) intervention. Changes in outcomes of interest in prespecified age (younger: 25–45 years; middle-aged: 46–54 years; older: 55–70 years) or sex (women and men) groups were compared.

Results

In total, 783 younger, 319 middle-aged and 1121 older adults and 1503 women and 720 men were included in the analysis. In the available case and complete case analyses, multivariable-adjusted linear mixed models showed that younger and older adults had similar weight loss after the LED, whereas older adults had greater sustained weight loss after the WM intervention (adjusted difference for older vs younger adults −1.25% [95% CI −1.92, −0.58], p<0.001). After the WM intervention, older adults lost more fat-free mass and bone mass and had smaller improvements in 2 h plasma glucose (adjusted difference for older vs younger adults 0.65 mmol/l [95% CI 0.50, 0.80], p<0.001) and systolic blood pressure (adjusted difference for older vs younger adults 2.57 mmHg [95% CI 1.37, 3.77], p<0.001) than younger adults. Older adults had smaller decreases in fasting and 2 h glucose, HbA1c and systolic blood pressure after the WM intervention than middle-aged adults. In the complete case analysis, the above-mentioned differences between middle-aged and older adults disappeared, but the direction of the effect size did not change. After the WL period, compared with men, women had less weight loss (adjusted difference for women vs men 1.78% [95% CI 1.12, 2.43], p<0.001) with greater fat-free mass and bone mass loss and smaller improvements in HbA1c, LDL-cholesterol and diastolic blood pressure. After the WM intervention, women had greater fat-free mass and bone mass loss and smaller improvements in HbA1c and LDL-cholesterol, while they had greater improvements in fasting glucose, triacylglycerol (adjusted difference for women vs men −0.08 mmol/l [−0.11, −0.04], p<0.001) and HDL-cholesterol.

Conclusions/interpretation

Older adults benefited less from a lifestyle intervention in relation to body composition and cardiometabolic health markers than younger adults, despite greater sustained weight loss. Women benefited less from a LED followed by a lifestyle intervention in relation to body weight and body composition than men. Future interventions targeting older adults or women should take prevention of fat-free mass and bone mass loss into consideration.

Citation

Zhu, R., Craciun, I., Bernhards-Werge, J., Jalo, E., Poppitt, S. D., Silvestre, M. P., …Raben, A. (2022). Age- and sex-specific effects of a long-term lifestyle intervention on body weight and cardiometabolic health markers in adults with prediabetes: results from the diabetes prevention study PREVIEW. Diabetologia, 65(8), 1262-1277. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-022-05716-3

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 31, 2022
Online Publication Date May 25, 2022
Publication Date 2022-08
Deposit Date Nov 25, 2022
Publicly Available Date Nov 29, 2022
Journal Diabetologia
Print ISSN 0012-186X
Electronic ISSN 1432-0428
Publisher Springer Verlag
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 65
Issue 8
Pages 1262-1277
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-022-05716-3
Keywords Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism; Internal Medicine
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/8226893
Publisher URL https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00125-022-05716-3

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